[11] Among those that gave Boss accolades for their own success was famed Brazilian modernist Anita Malfatti, and many of her most lauded paintings were created during this period while she was under his instruction.
[12] Boss later taught for two decades at the Art Students League of New York where he met his future wife, Suzanne Kutka.
Boss had a studio in Santa Cruz, New Mexico for the remaining 25 years of his life and it was there that he painted many of his most famous landscapes, as well as portraits of American Indians.
[17] His wood cuts, portraits and landscapes can be found in many prestigious museums including a full length portrait, among others, at the Chazen Museum of Art[18] on the campus of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and a woodcut in the collection of the National Gallery of Art.
[27] This article about a painter from the United States born in the 1880s is a stub.